sverd
Norwegian
noun-n1
Definitions
- a sword
Etymology
Inherited from Old Norse sverð inherited from Proto-Germanic *swerdą (sword) inherited from Proto-Indo-European *swer- (hum, buzz, fester, cut, whistling, ringing, swear, heavy, ache, resound, protect, pole, guard, stick, serious, speak loudly, speak, ring, grave, hiss, talk, whistle).
Origin
Proto-Indo-European
*swer-
Gloss
hum, buzz, fester, cut, whistling, ringing, swear, heavy, ache, resound, protect, pole, guard, stick, serious, speak loudly, speak, ring, grave, hiss, talk, whistle
Concept
Semantic Field
Speech and language
Ontological Category
Action/Process
Kanji
重
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- surdus Latin
- surus Latin
- susurrus Latin
- ссора Russian
- *seh₂w- Proto-Indo-European
- *su̯r̥dhom Proto-Indo-European
- *swer- Proto-Indo-European
- *swer-yo-s Proto-Indo-European
- *andaswarō Proto-Germanic
- *andswara- Proto-Germanic
- *swarjaną Proto-Germanic
- *swarmaz Proto-Germanic
- *swerdą Proto-Germanic
- *swēraz Proto-Germanic
- sverd Norwegian Nynorsk
- sweord Old English
- swerian Old English
- sword Old English
- स्वर Sanskrit
- swarmen Middle English
- Sverrir Old Norse
- sverð Old Norse
- *svarъ Proto-Slavic
- sverð Icelandic
- svørð Faroese
- *swerd gmw-pro
- *swerwos Proto-Celtic
- *swárati Proto-Indo-Iranian
- sværþ Old Swedish
- swærth Old Danish